The results might surprise you!

And that blogger was me! After a good few months’ worth of watching Doctor Who, reading Doctor Who scripts, talking to other people about their thoughts on Doctor Who, getting briefly sick of Doctor Who, watching more Doctor Who, and doing a tremendous amount of copypasting things into other things, here’s what happened.

"Secession."

The great people over at Estately have compiled an infographic that should hit close to home for anyone who lives in the U.S. Here's a map showing what each state Googles the most, and, yeah, I don't think there's a lot of cause for regional pride here. This is just weird all around, America.

More like National PIZZA Radio, amirite?

Quoctrung Bui of NPR is deeply concerned that the citizens of America aren't making informed decisions about their size of pizza pie. Inspired by sharing a slice with a pizza-savvy economist, she worked with Grubhub/Seamless to compile a graph to conclusively demonstrate that more pizza is always the best kind of pizza.

They fail to answer whether or not it it's comfortable to sit on. We're guessing no.

We know now that Walter White had $80 million to his name before "Ozymandias" -- at least, according to him. But how much prop money was actually used to construct the giant pile that went into that storage unit? Sparefoot.com, a website that -- surprise! -- locates storage facilities, decided to see how much they could figure it out for themselves.

If you could wear infographics, you can bet the Doctor would have put one on his head by now.

We talk a lot about Doctor Who here at Geekosystem, but what if you know nothing about the series and just want to avoid it? Well, you can't, because this is the Internet and all people do is talk about Doctor Who. You can, however, pick up some neat facts about the franchise from this awesome infographic. Not even we knew some of this stuff.

Not all that glitters is gold

A ring that shows you the timeline of events that happened to the Ring?
We need to go deeper, precious. (Emil Johansson of the Lord of the Rings Project explains here.)
Previously in The Lord of the RingsRead More

Armed with 56 years of information on tornadoes and a computer, John Nelson has created this remarkable map of the United States. On it, he's charted all of the known tornadoes and color-coded them by intensity. The result is a beautiful, if terrifying, map of destruction. See it, after the break.
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Space is a big place, a very big place, an unfathomably big place. Even our little corner of it is pretty gigantic, but it's at least slightly more fathomable. If you think you'd like to attempt to fathom it, this infographic by the BBC is likely to help, illustrating the distance between you and the farthest reaches of the solar system with conveniently fathomable benchmarks. Spoilers: It's still pretty hard to wrap your head around.

Get your mouse wheel finger warmed up and check out the full graphic after the jump.

Infographics are a dime a dozen nowadays, as the world figured out that if you want modern society to read things, they have to be splashy and colorful, or be about adolescent wizards. This infographic falls into the former camp, and visualizes what the most pirated movies of all time are, so you can have that information handy when you're trying to convince your friends that the movie industry is on the way out because of torrents. Or something. Full infographic after the jump.